The Guardian — Farmers’ roadblocks, ferries immobilised in ports, pensioners taking to the streets: protest has returned to Greece in what many fear could be the beginning of the crisis-plagued country’s most confrontational winter yet.
From the Greek-Bulgarian frontier to the southern island of Crete, farmers are up in arms over the spectre of more internationally mandated austerity.
“It’s war,” says Dimitris Vergos, a corn grower speaking from the northern town of Naoussa. “If they [politicians] go on pushing us to the edge, if they want to dehumanise us further, we will come to Athens and burn them all.”
Their fury is focused on proposed pension and tax measures, the latest in a battery of measures set as the price of the debt-stricken nation receiving a third, €86bn, bailout last summer.
For farmers, the draft policies are tantamount to the kiss of death. “We are going for all out confrontation,” said the prominent unionist Yannis Vangos, warning that by Friday roadblocks would be erected across a large swath of the county. “It seems we can’t see eye to eye at all. Things are out of control. It’s not just one thing we have to negotiate.”
Six years into Athens’ economic crisis, even more Greeks claim they have been pushed to the point where they can no longer survive the rigours of austerity. With an unprecedented 1.2 million people unemployed – more than 25% of the population – many have been pauperised by the biting effects of keeping bankruptcy at bay.
Pensioners, whose incomes have been reduced 12 times at the behest the EU and International Monetary Zone, this week also upped the ante taking to the streets.
Creditors argue that Greece’s pension system is Europe’s costliest and to great degree the generator of its fiscal dysfunction. But those who stand to be affected by the overhaul counter the changes go too far, given that pensions are, in the absence of a national social welfare or universal unemployment benefits, the only means of survival for a large number of families, and they have already been reduced substantially.
For farmers, the reforms will not only raise social security contributions from 6.5% to 27%, but double income tax payments from 13% to 26%, eradicating more than three quarters of their annual earnings.
“There are some I know who are forced to live on pensions of €360 (£275) a month,” says Vergos. He was among hundreds of farmers and stockbreeders who attempted to storm the Greek parliament upon hearing of the proposed plans in November. “It is as if with these latest measures they want us to give up.”
The 35-year-old added that he was already struggling to raise his three children because of cuts in benefits. “And to think I voted for Tsipras and his [Syriza] party,” he lamented. “To think I thought they were our big hope. Now I don’t want to see them in front of me.”
Almost a year to the day after they assumed power, sending tremors through Europe’s conservative establishment, the once unyielding anti-austerity leftists have come up against what every government has confronted since the onset of Greece’s great economic meltdown: the difficulty of placating the bodies keeping the country afloat while avoiding the political cost of doing so.
“Politically, Tsipras is cornered and the big question is how will he react?” said the political analyst Pandelis Kapsis. “The situation is very unstable and he has a record of unpredictability. He may call early elections or even another referendum.”
With unions announcing a general strike on 4 February, the prospect of social upheaval has reignited concerns over Greece’s ability to remain in the single currency. Amid fears that lenders, led by the hardline International Monetary Fund (IMF), will ask for further retrenchment – following discovery of a €1.8bn fiscal gap in the budget this year – an iteration of the Grexit crisis cannot be ruled out.